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4 votes
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The iPod silhouettes
6 votes -
Buried in ice - The Franklin Expedition cemetary
4 votes -
The self-hammering probe on NASA’s Mars lander can’t seem to actually dig into the ground
10 votes -
The evolution of urban planning in ten diagrams
12 votes -
Beyond headlines?
Tildes is much like Hacker News and Reddit in that article previews are limited to just headlines. (Well, there are tags, but they're de-emphasized since they're hidden by default.) While they are...
Tildes is much like Hacker News and Reddit in that article previews are limited to just headlines. (Well, there are tags, but they're de-emphasized since they're hidden by default.)
While they are very concise, a problem with headlines is that we rely on them too much. Even good ones don't really tell you what the article is about. In cases where it's hard to read the article (because it's paywalled or whatever) the conversation can be based mostly on the headline rather than the substance of the article. On Hacker News there are often mini-disputes about whether the headline is clickbait or not, and what's a better headline. "Headline is misleading" is a pretty common complaint.
I'm wondering if we could add a bit more information? One possibility would be a "Subtitle" field. Lots of articles have subtitles that are somewhat more informative, and doing a copy-paste is pretty easy.
Another would be to have a "pull quote" field. This requires a bit of editorial judgement by the submitter about what's the best pull quote, but I think that's okay. It's still copy-paste so at least they don't have to summarize anything in their own words.
For the last few days I've been posting a pull quote as the first comment whenever I post an article, and I think it works fairly well, except that the summary says "1 comment" when actually nobody commented - it's just the pull quote. Also, having an explicit field for the pull quote might allow better UI possibilities, like you could put them under the headline in the topic list.
18 votes -
Andrew Yang was groomed for a high-paying job at an elite law firm. He lasted five months.
9 votes -
Google owner Alphabet has made an offer to acquire wearable device maker Fitbit
9 votes -
When Amazon Web Services, Azure, or GCP becomes the competition
7 votes -
Bruce Soord - All This Will Be Yours (2019)
3 votes -
Three "programming" board games: Lovelace & Babbage, Quirky Circuits, and Pixoid
9 votes -
Overwatch 2 to feature PvE, new map, at least one new hero
8 votes -
Robin Sloan: Three things I learned about games while contributing writing to Neo Cab
4 votes -
Max Cooper - Repetition (2019)
4 votes -
Pando sold to BuySellAds - Sarah Lacy reflects on 8 years building the company, and 20 years in tech journalism in Silicon Valley
6 votes -
Dark color—Things you should know about color when adopting dark mode
6 votes -
Tether: The story so far
7 votes -
I've been accepted into GitHub Sponsors - if you have a Patreon pledge or other recurring donation to Tildes, I'd really appreciate it if you could move it over
When GitHub Sponsors was announced back in May, I applied immediately, and have just recently been accepted. This is now, by far, the best way available to make a recurring donation to Tildes:...
When GitHub Sponsors was announced back in May, I applied immediately, and have just recently been accepted.
This is now, by far, the best way available to make a recurring donation to Tildes:
- They aren't currently charging any fees, even for payment processing.
- They're matching up to $5000 in contributions for the first year.
On Patreon, about 10% of every donation is taken between processing fees, Patreon's own fees, and PayPal (for transferring the money out to the bank). Even without the matching, donating through GitHub instead means that 10% more of your money (all of what you're donating) will come to Tildes, and until we exhaust the matching it's more like 2.2x. For example, a $5/month donation on Patreon results in Tildes receiving about $4.50, but through GitHub it will be $10.
So if you have an existing recurring donation (or would like to start donating), I'd really appreciate if you could do it through GitHub Sponsors. Tildes is a non-profit, and its only source of income is user donations—there's no advertising, no investors, and I'm not selling your data or anything else (and none of those will ever change). Donations are what makes it possible for me to keep working on the site. For some more info, please see the Donate page on the Docs site (which I'll update soon with info about GitHub Sponsors).
The page is here: https://github.com/sponsors/Deimos
A few quick notes:
- I believe you'll need a GitHub account to sponsor through here, but it's quick to create one.
- You have the choice of making your sponsorship private or public.
- You have to choose one of the pre-defined "tiers", but I tried to create ones that match the most common donations. If you need a different amount that isn't available, let me know and I can probably add it. I still have a couple of slots left for more tiers.
- If you're currently donating through Patreon, please remember to cancel your pledge through there if you move it over to GitHub. The next Patreon payment will happen on November 1.
I'm also working on a couple things to make the amount that's currently being donated to Tildes public, and I hope to have that available later this week (and hopefully with a much higher number because of the GitHub matching!).
Thanks very much, and if there's anything confusing about the process or if you have any questions, please let me know.
114 votes -
New LA museum spotlights Hollywood costumes, from Dracula cape to Spider Woman dress
7 votes -
Australia wants to use face recognition for porn age verification
22 votes -
Apple reveals new AirPods Pro, available October 30
9 votes -
Xbox One All Access (Console and twenty-four months of Game Pass Ultimate starting at $20 a month)
3 votes -
This video is sponsored by ███ VPN
38 votes -
Prateek Kuhad - cold/mess (2018)
3 votes -
What games have you been playing, and what's your opinion on them?
What have you been playing lately? Discussion about video games and board games are both welcome. Please don't just make a list of titles, give some thoughts about the game(s) as well.
10 votes -
How a social network could save democracy from deadlock
4 votes -
What are you doing this week?
This topic is part of a weekly series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss their week. If you have any plans, goals, accomplishments, or even failures, whether they be personal or work...
This topic is part of a weekly series. It is meant to be a place for users to discuss their week.
If you have any plans, goals, accomplishments, or even failures, whether they be personal or work related, I'd love to hear about them. This is a place for casual discussion about your week, past, present, and future.
A list of all previous topics in this series can be found here.
So, what (or how) are you doing this week?
8 votes -
Firefox to get page translation feature, like Chrome
11 votes -
It's time to boycott any company doing business in Xinjiang
17 votes -
Dashboard act would force companies to tell users what their data is worth
7 votes -
Why a social credit system is so scary
13 votes -
Riding the unicorn—Peloton accidentally built a fitness cult. A business is a little more complicated.
8 votes -
Faster ZIP Decompression
8 votes -
Rock climbing and the economics of innovation
8 votes -
"Military" short from the TV show "Cake"
3 votes -
There is no algorithm for truth
16 votes -
Further split up ~tildes?
admittedly I should have asked for an invite sooner and posted this on the group request thread instead of here but here we are. ~tildes is the most active sub by far, so it only makes sense it...
admittedly I should have asked for an invite sooner and posted this on the group request thread instead of here but here we are.
~tildes is the most active sub by far, so it only makes sense it should be split up further.
Maybe split it up to ~tildes.site (for the look of the site.), ~tildes.syntax (for the markdown used in tildes.) and ~tildes.community (for self-awareness, talking about how we could improve this community, what it needs and where it's headed.)
Any opinions?
1 vote -
Sorry—organic farming is actually worse for climate change
13 votes -
Book Review: French Tanks of the Great War
3 votes -
Block on GM rice ‘has cost millions of lives and led to child blindness’
10 votes -
Raf Rundell - Sweet Cheeks (2017)
3 votes -
China is forcing the world to rethink recycling
9 votes -
ღahan 💀 ღahan - Sabotaged by the Licorice Jellybean
3 votes -
What's one thing you HAVEN'T been able to find online, no matter how hard you tried?
It could be the final piece to your prized collection, a person you talked to before they seemingly disappeared, a story you read that has since been deleted, etc. In my case, I really wanted to...
It could be the final piece to your prized collection, a person you talked to before they seemingly disappeared, a story you read that has since been deleted, etc.
In my case, I really wanted to find a website called notebookinhand.com, a forum I came across while I was a teenager in the early 2010s. It was solely dedicated to people describing their hobbies, and the community seemed very nice and welcoming, and I also like how the site was designed. It looks like it's been shut down but I can't stop thinking about it!
So, tell me what's your internet "unicorn", so to speak.
44 votes -
The sad saga of Purism and the Librem 5 (Part 1)
19 votes -
Survival by degrees: 389 bird species on the brink
3 votes -
Family of teen who died from Ecstacy support legalisation
8 votes -
Why Costco is cheaper than Amazon
5 votes -
Please criticize my idea for CHORES - a short-term TODO app for ADHD people (and myself in particular)
Introduction I'm a beginner in programming, but a veteran in film and literature. I know that ideas come easy. Any normal person can come up with a good idea in a matter of minutes. The main...
Introduction
I'm a beginner in programming, but a veteran in film and literature. I know that ideas come easy. Any normal person can come up with a good idea in a matter of minutes. The main problem is doing it.
Besides, I couldn't care less if someone does that before me. I'd probably benefit from their program, and even offer to collaborate. I have a bunch of other ideas in the oven anyway.
And I'm humble enough to know that such a niche project would never attract the interest of a mega-corporation anyway.
2. What is CHORES?
CHORES is a short-term task manager. It's meant to organize nothing more than a few hours or less of your tasks. Month, weak or even your entire day are entirely out of its scope.
3. Who is CHORES for?
First and foremost, this app is for my use. But I'm certain there are other people with conditions similar to mine, especially ones with ADHD. I'm also autistic with a compulsive personality, and won't stop until I tinker with every aspect of an object. Not surprisingly, I'm a Linux, i3wm, Emacs and Neovim user. And they're excruciatingly customized.
What I need is not a full-featured a TODO app like Remember The Milk, Todoist or Org Mode. They're too distracting, I end up just playing with the tools. I need something that allows me to track very short term chores. Thinks like brushing my teeth, taking a shower, eating, walking my dog, washing the dishes and making my bed.
That's what I intend to do.
4. What is ADHD
From the United States National Institute of Mental Health:
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a disorder marked by an ongoing pattern of inattention and/or hyperactivity-impulsivity that interferes with functioning or development.
4.1 Warning
Please refrain from suggesting that the ones who use such tools just need to make an effort instead. That's a cliche most people with ADHD and other mental health issues probably heard many times, and by saying that you may cause distress. If you need more information, please refer to the link posted above.
5. Why another "TODO" app?
People with severe ADHD like myself frequently forget what they're doing, and what they should do in the very short term. I'm talking 2, 3 or 5 tasks from now. To give you an idea of how bad it is, right now I have an Emacs Org Mode file with the following tasks:
* Now ** TODO Take Ritalin ** TODO Start chronometer on Ritalin - Tells me when the effect wears off ** TODO Take a shower ** TODO Take the laptop to the living room ** TODO Wash the dishes ** TODO Study Python ** TODO Post on TildesBut Emacs and Org Mode do a lot more than that, and this can be very distracting (right now I'm writing this post because creating another file from my
now.orgfile was way too easy, for example).Considering that I am the main target audience of this program, any space for tinkering is a dangerous avenue for procrastination.
6. Who is CHORES for
The primary target of this project are people with:
- ADHD (Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder)
- similar conditions or personality traits
In sum: if you have extreme difficulty focusing, remembering and fulfilling your tasks in the very short term, you may find this program useful.
7. Who is CHORES not for
The majority of people can concentrate and perform their short-term tasks with a reasonable degree of efficiency. If that is your case, you have little to gain by using CHORES.
8. Features
CHORES is a short-term task manager. It's meant to organize nothing more than a few hours: not your month, weak or even your day.
- CLI Linux app (Mac, Windows, GUI, and mobile could happen in the future)
- Hard limit of ten tasks (with the option to reduce)
- Only the very essential configurations available
- tinkering is a huge time drain for ADHD people
- because of that, the defaults will have to be extremely sensible.
StartedStoppedstatus clearly marked by character or highlighting
8.1 What you would be able to do with CHORES:
- Add up to ten tasks
- Reorder/Start/Stop/Done these tasks
- Undo only one operation
- See only the last ten completed tasks
9. Answer to Possible Questions
9.1 Why Not Keep Using Org Mode? Or maybe Taskwarrior?
Org Mode and Emacs are wonderful tools, but they're also a perfect playground for procrastinators. It simply does too much. Emacs is like a box of legos, and that's the last thing an ADHD person needs when it comes to tracking short-term tasks.
Taskwarrior suffers from the same issue.
9.2 Why Not todo.txt and similar apps?
This may seem crazy, but for a severe ADHD person, even
todo.txtgives way too many options and features. It is, after, an actual TODO app. I can add 1000 taskstodo.txt. It has an extensive wiki, projects, tags, context tags, special value tags. You might just say: just don't use these options. But that9.3 Why not use the extremely minimalist t task manager, by Steve Losh?
I like
tvery much, and, depending on its license, I'll probably use at least some of its code. Buttlacks some features CHORES requires, such as:- Limit task amount
- Add tasks to the bottom (
tlast tasks randomly, or at least something that seem random to me) - Reorder tasks
- Undo
- Easily view completed tasks
- Add Start/Stop status to a task
9.4 Why not pen and paper?
This is a very personal anwer, but here we go:
- I will lose the paper every 30 minutes
- I will lose the pen every 30 minutes
- I will forget to look at the paper, it will probably end up crumpled in my pock
- Many of my tasks, such as programming and studying, already happen in the computer anyway
- One of my medications interferes with my motor skills and my handwriting is hard to understand - even for me
- I like computers. The fact that I like computers makes more likely for me to actually look at the tasks.
- In the future, I can add alerts. Can't do that with paper
11 votes -
Who's making good films?
I'm interested to find out who you think is making good films? I'm also interested in what your favourite film from them is, and why you like it. Feel free to interpret it how you like -- I'm...
I'm interested to find out who you think is making good films? I'm also interested in what your favourite film from them is, and why you like it.
Feel free to interpret it how you like -- I'm interested in distribution as well as production companies, as well as producers, directors, writers, and actors.
20 votes